Sentences with phrase «health care rationing»

They say that there will be no rationing — and yet, attempts to amend the bill to proscribe health care rationing have all been rejected.
I have noticed lately that the political left, which most supports health care rationing (and which, ironically, yells the loudest about HMO care restrictions), argues disingenuously for the agenda through the time - tested tactic of blatant misdirection.
As health care rationing is seriously on the table — generally supported by the political Left — some of that persuasion also want to include illegal immigrants in Obamacare if they buy the premiums.
In Health Care for Some, historian Beatrix Hoffman examines how health care rationing has actually been the norm in recent U.S. history, and how that might be starting to shift as more people accept the idea that health care is a right
Five Days at Memorial, the culmination of six years of reporting, unspools the mystery of what happened in those days, bringing the reader into a hospital fighting for its life and into a conversation about the most terrifying form of health care rationing.
Fourth is an insightful post in the NY Times about health care rationing and why it must happen in the US.
The English case law on health care rationing can be divided into two stages.
-- and talks, and talks: I was interviewed for the Derek Gilbert podcast recently about Obamacare, health care rationing, the danger of bioethics to the vulnerable, animal rights, and human exceptionalism.
We keep being told that Obamacare will not lead to health care rationing.
For one thing, the actual bill makes changes that are far less scary than the «death panels» and «health care rationing» that dominated conservative discourse last year, leaving Republicans little to yell «boo» over.
For the record, the Death Panels idea was mostly due to the simple logical conclusion that Obamacare will lead to health care rationing.
The field of bioethics has addressed a broad swathe of human inquiry, ranging from debates over the boundaries of life (e.g. abortion, euthanasia), surrogacy, the allocation of scarce health care resources (e.g. organ donation, health care rationing) to the right to refuse medical care for religious or cultural reasons.
The quest for change is stymied by pharmaceutical company lobbying aimed at convincing the public that shutting some doors would amount to health care rationing, not better treatment or medical advance.
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